Cellular Component of Telecom Costs becoming Killer
This entry was posted on 1/18/2007 9:20 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
A NJ-based research firm is saying that more companies are spending the
bulk of the telecom services dollar on cellular services. Um, Duh!
I
applaud the research efforts of Insight Research. They did an excellent
job writing up a nifty little report detailing how enterprises spend
money on telecom services. As detailed as their research is, however,
it seems painfully obvious to me. The evidence is no further away than
your own phone bills.
I, for example, have switched my home
phone over to Verizon's VoIP service, which they have branded VoiceWing
(snicker all you want). Cost: $29.95 per month. Vonage and other VoIP
providers can be used for less, though I've found that $20 per month
seems to be about the bargain basement for all you cheap-o's out there.
Now, can you run your enterprise telephony needs on Vonage? Definitely
not. But there are solutions out there to help enterprises drastically
reduce their wireline telecom bills.
Now compare that small
expenditure to my wireless bill, and it's night and day. I pay Verizon
Wireless over $90 for a reasonable voice plan and a low-tier data plan.
That's three times the cost, and it's not really all that much. I know
power users who spend well over $150 a month for ridiculous buckets of
minutes and basically have their wireless phones glued to their heads
constantly (you know who I'm talking about, Ed).
At my last
full-time job, I had a good old trusty PBX sitting on my desk and a
work-provisioned BlackBerry. Honestly, I never touched my PBX. ALl it
did was gather dust. My mom probably called me on that phone more than
anyone else. My employer was, however, shelling out about $100 a month
on my voice and data plan for the BlackBerry. There's no way my PBX
bill, even lumped in with the overall organization, amounted to that
much each month.
The point of all this is, with the number of
mobile employees requiring voice and data plans on the rise,
enterprises can expect their cellular bills to rise as well. The key
for cost-conscious enterprises is to negotiate with your local,
long-distance and wireless providers and get the best batch of plans
available. Don't be afraid to look at new technology, like VoIP other
IP-based systems. Countless engineers worked hard on them to save you
money. The least you could do is pay attention for a few moments.